85000 ft according to NASA in official terms
2006-08-22 17:07:34
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answer #1
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answered by theevilfez 4
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The legal boundary of territorial airspace is 100 km above sea level. A practical boundary would be the lowest orbit in which a satellite would stay up indefinitely, and that would be about three or four times this altitude.
2006-08-22 17:17:51
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answer #2
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answered by zee_prime 6
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Like many things, it depends. One answer - 100km or about 62 miles. However, Astronauts get their "wings" when they go over 50 miles. For reference, 30,000 feet is about six miles - this is the altitude most planes fly at.
However, all of these are ideas for the atmosphere simply thins as you go up, so there is no definite line between space and atmosphere.
2006-08-22 17:11:48
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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It is officially 62.14 miles, 100km, 328,100ft..
The altitude to be achieved to win the X prize..
Won by Paul Allen & Burt Rutan...
Two flights, Sept. 29 & Oct. 4, 2004 won them this prize
for the first private manned flights to space...
2006-08-22 17:25:17
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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I think about 65 miles or something like that. I know it is called the Karman line. Look it up.
2006-08-22 17:11:13
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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i'm unsure yet truthfully above the clouds. often you may tell whilst the ambience starts to vanish and in case your no longer donning shielding kit and an oxygen tank, you give up respiratory and get extremely chilly and no rely what you place on you initiate floating
2016-12-14 10:08:53
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answer #6
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answered by ? 4
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"The Karman line, at 100 km (62 mi), is also frequently used as the boundary between atmosphere and space."
Thanks for the question...I had to look it up *I love science*
2006-08-22 17:18:00
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answer #7
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answered by Aleaha S 3
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are you asking the distance from the surface or earth (sea level) to the earth's outmost atmosphere, or outside our solar system, or to infinity, or beyond? more specific....
2006-08-22 17:09:07
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answer #8
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answered by gnet_162000 4
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